Everything about Dan Danish totally explained
Dan is the name of one or more legendary kings of the
Danes in medieval Scandinavian texts.
The Lejre Chronicle
The
Chronicle of Lejre (
Chronicon Lethrense) written about 1170 introduces a primeval King Ypper of
Uppsala whose three sons were Dan, who afterwards ruled Denmark,
Nori, who afterwards ruled
Norway, and Østen, who afterwards ruled the
Swedes. Dan apparently first ruled in
Zealand for the Chronicle states that it was when Dan had saved his people from an attack by the Emperor
Augustus that the
Jutes and the men of
Fyn and
Scania also accepted him as king, whence the resultant expanded country of Denmark was named after him. Dan's wife was named Dana and his son was named Ro.
The Rígsthula
The Eddic poem
Rígsthula, tells how the god
Ríg (said to be
Heimdall), fathered a mortal son named Jarl 'noble' later known as Ríg-Jarl. Ríg-Jarl had eleven sons, the youngest of which bore the name Kon the Young (Old Norse
Konr Ungr), this name understood to be the origin of the title
konungr 'king', though the etymology is in fact untenable. One day, as he was hunting and snaring birds in the forest, a crow spoke to him and suggested he'd gain more by going after men, and praised the wealth of "Dan and Danp". The poem breaks off incomplete at that point.
The Skjöldungasaga
According to
Arngrímur Jónsson's
Latin epitome of the lost
Skjöldungasaga made in 1597:
Ríg (Rigus) was a man not the least among the great ones of his time. He married the daughter of a certain Danp [OldNorse Danpr], lord of Danpsted, whose name was Dana; and later, having won the royal title for his province, left as his heir his son by Dana, called Dan or Danum, all of whose subjects were called Danes.
This tradition is close to that of the
Rígsthula.
This Dan married Olof the daughter of
Wermund and so became brother-in-law to the
Offa mentioned in the Old English poem
Beowulf. Dan ruled first in
Jutland but then conquered Zealand from King Aleif creating the kingdom of Denmark.
Ynglinga saga
Snorri Sturluson's
Ynglinga saga relates of King
Dygvi of Sweden:
Dygvi's mother was Drótt, a daughter of King Danp, the son of Ríg, who was first called konungr ['king'] in the Danish tongue [(Old Norse)]. His descendants always afterwards considered the title of konungr the title of highest dignity. Dygvi was the first of his family to be called konungr, for his predecessors had been called dróttinn ['chieftain'], and their wives dróttning, and their court drótt ['warband']. Each of their race was called Yngvi, or Ynguni, and the whole race together Ynglingar. Queen Drótt was a sister of King Dan Mikilláti, from whom Denmark took its name.
Here Ríg is father of Danp the father of Dan. The title
Mikilláti can be translated 'Magnificent' or 'Proud'.
Snorri doesn't relate here whether this Dan is also descended from King Fridfrodi or Peace-
Fróði whom Snorri presented as ruling in Zealand as a contemporary of
Fjölnir son of
Frey six generations before King Dygvi. Snorri writes further:
In the time when the kings we've been speaking of were in Uppsala, Denmark had been ruled over by Dan Mikilláti, who lived to a very great age; then by his son, Fróði Mikilláti, or the Peace-loving, who was succeeded by his sons Halfdan and Fridleif, who were great warriors.
This peaceful Fróði seems a duplicate of the earlier Fróði.
In his preface to the
Heimskringla (which includes the
Ynglinga saga), Snorri writes:
The Age of Cairns began properly in Denmark after Dan Mikilláti had raised for himself a burial cairn, and ordered that he should be buried in it on his death, with his royal ornaments and armour, his horse and saddle-furniture, and other valuable goods; and many of his descendants followed his example. But the burning of the dead continued, long after that time, to be the custom of the Swedes and Northmen.
Sven Aagesen
The 12th century
historian Sven Aagesen mentions Danu
Elatus 'the Proud' presumably, Dan Mikilláti, and makes him the successor to Uffi, that's to
Offa son of
Wermund, so agreeing with the
Skjöldungasaga. He said that this Dan was so powerful a king that he'd another king as his page and two nobles to hold his horse.
The Gesta Danorum
Saxo Grammaticus in his
Gesta Danorum presents three different Danish monarchs named Dan, either splitting up a single monarch into many, or properly keeping separate what others have confused.
Saxo begins his history with two brothers named
Dan and Angul, sons of one Humbli, who were made rulers by the consent of the people because of their bravery. They were not however called "kings", as that usage wasn't then common.
Angul is the eponym of the region of
Angul and from his people eventually came the English who gave their name to England. Dan fathered two sons,
Humblus and
Lotherus, by his wife Grytha.
Neither Humblus is otherwise known, though
Humli is a leader of Huns in the Old Norse
Battle of the Goths and Huns. Lotherus might have some relation to the Norse god
Lóðurr or to the exiled king
Heremod mentioned in
Beowulf or to both. According to Saxo, Lotherus is father of the famous hero
Skioldus.
The
second king called Dan appears much later in Book 4, as the son of Uffi son of Vermund, (that is
Offa son of
Wermund). But Saxo passes over him in a few lines as a warlike king who scorned his subjects and wasted his wealth, much degenerated from his ancestors.
He is followed by King Huglek, then Fróði the Active, who is then followed by the
third Dan. Apparently this Dan is the son of Fróði the Active, though Saxo doesn't specifically give the parentage of any of these kings. Of this Dan, Saxo relates only an anecdote that when Dan was twelve years old, tired of the arrogance of Saxon ambassadors who demanded tribute on pain of war, he bridged the river
Elbe with ships, crossed over, and won a great victory.
This Dan is father of Fridlef father of Frothi, in whom one recognizes Fridleif and his son Fróði mentioned often in Norse sources, the latter being, at least by parentage, the Peace-Fróði whom Snorri introduced in the early in the
Ynglinga saga.
The Song of Eric
The
Song of Eric deals with Eric, the first king of
Geatland (
fyrsti konunger i Götalandinu vidha). He sent a troop of
Geats southward to a country named
Vetala, where no one had yet cultivated the land. In their company was a wise man who was to uphold the law. Finally, the
Geatish king Humli set his son Dan to rule the settlers, and after Dan, Vetala was named
Denmark.
The song was first published in a Latin translation in
Johannes Magnus'
Historia de omnibus gothorum sueonumque regibus (1554). He states that the original song was widely sung in Sweden at the time.
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